Once a finance minister seen as enjoying no powers other than signing on papers, then removed and made power minister, Captain Ajay Singh Yadav was apparently biding his time. He quit when his arch rival, Chief Minister B S Hooda, was under sustained pressure following the Congress’s performance in the Lok Sabha elections, just ahead of assembly elections, and when leaders were leaving the party and rivals were calling for Hooda’s head. “I am no more a rubber stamp,” Yadav sad while quitting.

Though he is seen as easy-going, few can challenge his standing as a mass leader. He has won six consecutive assembly elections. He was, however, restricted to state politics until his son Chiranjeev Yadav, former Haryana Youth Congress president, married the daughter of RJD chief Lalu Prasad. This brought him closer to the Congress leadership. But his rivalry with Hooda continues at home; he accuses the chief minister of trying to create a rift among leaders in southern Haryana, where Yadav wields his influence.

Yadav first became a minister in 1991 under chief minister Bhajan Lal, and has since been part of all Congress cabinets in the state. When Indian National Lok Dal chief Om Prakash Chautala became chief minister in between, Yadav was the deputy leader of the Congress Legislature Party with Hooda as leader.

He claims Hooda never missed a chance to humiliate him and accuses him of restricting development of his area. “Roads in bad shape, the public health system at the brink of collapse, no educational facilities, no jobs for the people of my area and undercutting my mass base — this chief minister has done everything possible to harm my political career,” Yadav told The Indian Express. “Never have I suffered such insults from anyone. There is no question of working with him.”

He had wanted the Gurgaon Lok Sabha ticket for his son but was denied. He was pushing for an assembly ticket too but says he got no support from Hooda. His efforts to become a non-Jat face of the party and his to take over the state unit, replacing Phool Chand Mullana, all fell through, for which he holds Hooda responsible.

Yadav has never missed an opportunity to hit back. He recently organised a public protest against the government over land acquisition.

After his resignation, he found support from yet another rival of Hooda in the Congress, Kumari Selja. “This has not happened overnight and there have been issues. The CM should have sorted it out a long time back. It is his responsibility and he has to address it,” PTI quoted Selja as saying in New Delhi.

She does not expect Yadav to quit the party. “Some leaders have the habit of changing parties before an election, but he (Yadav) is not one of those. The Congress is an old party and senior leaders who have been working for the organisation for long should not leave the party,” she said.